Platinum Member

Advocate V.Ravindhar is the Platinum Member of Andhra Pradesh High Court Advocates Association. Advocate Ravindhar has contested many challenging cases in the High Court of Andhra Pradesh India.

Contact Advocate V.Ravindhar at +91-91 488 74841(India), +91 -7207817006 (India) , +66- 638090770 (Thailand)

Email: advocate@raviwala.in Address: Malathi Nilayam, Sitapuram Colony, Poranki, Vijayawada 521137, A.P. India

Commercial Arbitration Expert

Commercial arbitration is a means of settling disputes by referring them to a neutral person, an arbitrator, selected by the parties for a decision based on the evidence and arguments presented to the arbitration tribunal. The parties agree in advance that the decision will be accepted as final and binding.

Historically, commercial arbitration was used in resolving controversies between medieval merchants in fairs and marketplaces in England and on the European continent and in the Mediterranean and Baltic sea trade. The increased use of commercial arbitration became possible after courts were empowered to enforce the parties’ agreement to arbitrate. The first such statute was the English Arbitration Act of 1889, which was later consolidated into an act of 1950 and adopted by arbitration statutes in most countries of the British Commonwealth. It was followed in the United States by an arbitration statute of the state of New York in 1920 and the Federal Arbitration Act of 1925. The latter dealt with the enforcement in federal courts of arbitration agreements and awards in maritime transactions and those involving interstate and foreign commerce. Most U.S. states adopted, sometimes with minor changes, the Uniform Arbitration Act of 1955, as amended in 1956, which had been promoted by the Commissioners on Uniform State Laws and recommended by the American Bar Association. This act provided for the judicial enforcement of an agreement to arbitrate existing and future disputes and thereby made the arbitration agreement no longer revocable, as it had been under common law. It also provided for the substitution of arbitrators in the event of a party’s failing to select an arbitrator and for a suspension of any court action instituted in contravention of a voluntary arbitration agreement. The courts thereby play an important role in implementing arbitration agreements and making judicial assistance available against a recalcitrant party. This concept of modern arbitration law, which recognizes the irrevocability of arbitration agreements and the enforceability of awards, also prevails in the arbitration statutes of nearly all countries.

Function and scope

Arbitration customarily has been used for the settlement of disputes between members of trade associations and between different exchanges in the securities and commodities trade. Form contracts often contain a standard arbitration clause referring to specific arbitration rules. Numerous arrangements between parties in industry and commerce also provide for the arbitration of controversies arising out of contracts for the sale of manufactured goods, for terms of service of employment, for construction and engineering projects, for financial operations, for agency and distribution arrangements, and for many other undertakings.

The usefulness and significance of arbitration are demonstrated by its increasing use by the business community and the legal profession in many countries of the world. An advantage of arbitration can be the speed with which controversies can be resolved by arbitration, compared with the long delays of ordinary court procedure. The expert knowledge of arbitrators of the customs and usages of a specific trade makes testimony by others and much documentation unnecessary and thereby eliminates some expenses generally associated with court procedures. The privacy of the arbitration procedure also is much valued by parties to the controversy; situations unfavourable to the party’s credit or deficiencies in manufactured goods revealed in arbitration proceedings do not become known to outsiders. There are, however, disadvantages in the arbitration process. Because in Anglo-American practice abitrators generally do not have to provide any reason to accompany an award, it has been difficult to develop guidelines for the conduct of business relations. Moreover, this uncertainty makes the arbitral decision less predictable. Further obstacles to the wider use of commercial arbitration are the divergences in municipal laws and court decisions that result in different interpretations of similar arbitration questions and the fact that awards usually are not published.

AP Highcourt Platinum Advocate V.Ravindhar Top Advocate in High Court of Andhra Pradesh
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